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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Jones v. Liberata Life Pensions Investments Ltd [2004] UKEAT 0897_03_0602 (6 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0897_03_0602.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 897_3_602, [2004] UKEAT 0897_03_0602 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 13 January 2004 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
MR P DAWSON OBE
MR T STANWORTH
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR D S JONES (the Appellant in Person) |
For the Respondent | MR T LINDEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Liberata Life Pensions Investments Ltd – Human Resources St James's House 27-43 Eastern Road Romford RM1 3NH |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
1 "Statement of initial employment particulars
(1) Where an employee begins employment with an employer, the employer shall give to the employee a written statement of particulars of employment.
(2) The statement may (subject to section 2 (4)) be given in instalments and (whether or not give in instalments) shall be given not later than two months after the beginning of the employment.
(3) The statement shall contain particulars of –
(a) the names of the employer and employee,
(b) the date when the employment began, and
(c) the date on which the employee's period of continuous employment began (taking into account any employment with a previous employer which counts towards that period).
(4) The statement shall also contain particulars, as at a specified date not more than seven days before the statement (or the instalment containing them) is given, of –
(a) the scale or the rate of remuneration or the method of calculating remuneration,
(b) the intervals at which remuneration is paid (that is, weekly, monthly or other specified intervals),
(c) any terms and conditions relating to hours of work (including any terms and conditions relating to normal working hours),
(d) any terms and conditions relating to any of the following –
(i) entitlement to holidays, including public holidays, and holiday pay (the particulars given being sufficient to enable the employee' entitlement, including any entitlement to accrued holiday pay on the termination of employment, to be precisely calculated),
(ii) incapacity for work due to sickness or injury, including any prevision for sick pay, and
(iii) pensions and pension schemes.
(e) the length of notice which the employee is obliged to give and entitled to receive to terminate his contract of employment.
(f) the title of the job which the employee is employed to do or a brief description of the work for which he is employed.
(g) where the employment is not intended to be permanent, the period for which it is expected to continue or, if it is for a fixed term, the date when it is to end.
(h) either the place of work or, where the employee is required or permitted to work at various places, an indication of that and of the address of the employer.
(j) any collective agreements which directly affect the terms and conditions of the employment including, where the employer is not a party, the person by whom they were made, and
(k) where the employee is required to work outside the United Kingdom for a period of more than one month –
(i) the period for which he is to work outside the United Kingdom,
(ii) the currency in which remuneration is to be paid while he is working outside the United Kingdom,
(iii) any additional remuneration payable to him, and any benefits to be provided to or in respect of him, by reason of his being required to work outside the United Kingdom, and
(iv) any terms and conditions relating to his return to the United Kingdom."
Section 11 (1) of the Act provides that:
11 (1) "Where an employer does not give an employee a statement as required by section 1, 4 or 8 (either because he gives him no statement or because the statement he gives does not comply with what is required), the employee may require a reference to be made to an employment tribunal to determine what particulars ought to have been included or referred to in a statement so as to comply with the requirements of the section concerned."
Facts
"In 1998 the Group established a qualifying employee share ownership trust for the purposes of delivering shares on the exercise of options under the Saye. During 2002 the Group received from the trustees of Quest £122 million on the issue of shares in respect of the exercise of options awarded under Saye. Of the amount received from the trustees, employees paid £76 million and the balance of £46 million comprised contribution to the Quest from the Group companies."
(1) "Any sum which is paid as a wage or salary without qualification is part of the employee's remuneration.
(2) The value of any benefit in kind (e.g. free accommodation) or paid in cash by someone other than the employer (e.g. the Easter offering) is to be disregarded as not forming part of the remuneration.
(3) Any sum which is agreed to be paid by way of reimbursement or on account of expenditure incurred by the employee has to be examined to see whether in broad terms the whole or any part of the sum represents a profit or surplus in the hands of the employee to the extent that it does represent such a profit or surplus as is part of the employee's remuneration."
5 "It is the self-evident starting point in considering what constitutes employees' remuneration in the context of employment, that the money in question must stem or flow from the employer. Thereafter, it has to be categorised as profit, as opposed to expenses if that is the relevant test.
6 Having studied the scheme, we are entirely satisfied that no money emanates from the employer with regard to the fixing of the option price and, equally, that they do not provide the interest upon the accumulated money that may be set aside by the employee. We entirely agree with the approach adopted by the Chairman of the Tribunal that the one and only source of money in relation to this scheme is of the employee. Obviously, the employer makes a scheme available but, beyond that, makes no financial contribution. Mr Truscott invited us to consider whether in fact the artificial share price represented a payment by the employer, but we can find no basis for such a conclusion.
7 Mr Truscott invited us to consider the matter in the wider context of European legislation but we do not consider this to be necessary or adding anything since it is again concerned with the definition of "remuneration". We consider that the Tribunal Chairman was more than justified to focus on the single issue of remuneration and, furthermore, we conclude that he reached the correct decision, for the reasons he gives."
(i) Section 1 (4) (b) clearly contemplates that remuneration is something which is paid by the employer on a regular basis when it speaks of "the intervals at which remuneration is paid (that is weekly, monthly or other specified intervals)".
(ii) Section 1 (4) (k) (ii) also contemplates remuneration as something which is paid by the employer when it refers to "the currency in which remuneration must be paid while he is working outside the United Kingdom".
(iii) Section 1 (4) (k) (iii) clearly draws distinction between remuneration and benefits in referring to "any additional remuneration payable to him, and any benefits to be provided to or in respect of him, by reason of his being required to work outside the United Kingdom".
(iv) Section 2 (4) of the 1996 Act requires that particulars falling within section 1 (4) (a) to be included in a single document. Mr Linden argues that this clearly indicates that Parliament did not contemplate that section 1 (4) (a) would require an employer to declare the detailed rights and obligations between employer and employee under or in connection with an Saye scheme or any other scheme since it would not be practicable to provide the relevant particulars in a single document. By contrast Parliament did recognise that for example sick pay schemes or pension schemes may be incorporated by reference – see section 2 (2).
2 "The information referred to in paragraph 1 shall cover at least the following -
…
(h) the initial basic amount, the other component elements and the frequency of payment of the remuneration to which the employee is entitled."
(2) "The amount of a week's pay is the amount of remuneration for the average number of weekly normal working hours at the average hourly rate of remuneration."
16 "We are satisfied that the Scheme does not fall within the scope of Section 1 of the Employment Rights Act 1996. In particular it does not fall within the meaning of Remuneration as it appears at Section 1 (4) of the Act. We accept the Respondent's argument that, in context, this term refers to payments made the employer to the employee and that the Scheme itself cannot be said to fall within such a use of the term. The term does not admit of a different meaning elsewhere in the Act, indeed, it admits of the same meaning.
17 If we are wrong about that, namely that we have adopted an unduly restrictive use of the term "remuneration", then we are not satisfied that payments flowed from the employer under the Scheme such that there was profit in the hands of the Applicant. Whilst it is clear that the Applicant could in a general sense "profit" from the Scheme, indeed his complaint is that his enforced premature exclusion from the Scheme effectively reduced this profit, that still does not bring the operation of the Scheme within the criteria identified in the Keiller case. The source of the Fund was that part of the Applicant's wages (itself properly categorised as "remuneration") plus the interest thereon over the Term. The interest was paid by Quest and not by the employer and we are satisfied that Quest, albeit connected to Barclays, was not the Applicant's employer. Obviously Barclays Plc made the Scheme available to the Applicant but it made no direct financial contribution to the Applicant's Fund. For these reasons we are satisfied that the Applicant is not entitled to a Section 1 Declaration in respect of the Scheme."